A NASA probe headed to Jupiter has snapped a striking photo of Earth and the Moon, showing our home planet as it appears from more than 9 million kilometers away.

The Juno spacecraft took the new photo Aug. 26 as part of a test of its camera imaging system called JunoCam. The result: a parting shot of the Earth-Moon system as the probe sails on its five-year trip to Jupiter.

“This is a remarkable sight people get to see all too rarely,” said Juno principal investigator Scott Bolton, of the Southwest Research Institute in San Antonio, in a statement. “This view of our planet shows how Earth looks from the outside, illustrating a special perspective of our role and place in the universe. We see a humbling yet beautiful view of ourselves.”

NASA released Juno’s family portrait of Earth and the Moon Aug. 30. It shows the Earth as a bright white disk on a vast field of black space. The Moon appears as a tiny speck of light to the Earth’s right.

Juno beamed the photo home about 25 days after its Aug. 5 launch from Florida. The spacecraft covered the distance between the Earth and Moon, a span of about 400, 000 kilometers, in less than a single day, according to a NASA description.

NASA’s $1.1 billion Juno probe headed to Jupiter is the first solar-powered mission ever aimed at the gas giant. The spacecraft will arrive in orbit around Jupiter in July 2016 and is expected to uncover new clues into the origins, atmosphere and core of the largest planet in our solar system, mission scientists have said.

By coincidence, Juno snapped its home planet photo nearly 34 years after another iconic view of Earth and the Moon from a different spacecraft — the Voyager 1 probe.

Voyager 1 took its stunning view of Earth and the Moon, which reveals Earth’s blue oceans and clouds along with a crescent Moon overhead, on Sept. 18, 1977. That photo was taken from a distance of about 11.6 million kilometers.